A Synthetic Population for Modelling the Dynamics of Infectious Disease Transmission in American Samoa

被引:0
|
作者
Zhijing Xu
Kathryn Glass
Colleen L. Lau
Nicholas Geard
Patricia Graves
Archie Clements
机构
[1] Australian National University,Research School of Population Health
[2] University of Melbourne,School of Computing and Information Systems
[3] University of Melbourne,Melbourne School of Population and Global Health
[4] James Cook University,College of Public Health, Medical and Veterinary Sciences, Division of Tropical Health and Medicine
来源
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Agent-based modelling is a useful approach for capturing heterogeneity in disease transmission. In this study, a synthetic population was developed for American Samoa using an iterative approach based on population census, questionnaire survey and land use data. The population will be used as the basis for a new agent-based model, intended specifically to fill the knowledge gaps about lymphatic filariasis transmission and elimination, but also to be readily adaptable to model other infectious diseases. The synthetic population was characterized by the statistically realistic population and household structure, and high-resolution geographic locations of households. The population was simulated over 40 years from 2010 to 2050. The simulated population was compared to estimates and projections of the U.S. Census Bureau. The results showed the total population would continuously decrease due to the observed large number of emigrants. Population ageing was observed, which was consistent with the latest two population censuses and the Bureau’s projections. The sex ratios by age groups were analysed and indicated an increase in the proportion of males in age groups 0–14 and 15–64. The household size followed a Gaussian distribution with an average size of around 5.0 throughout the simulation, slightly less than the initial average size 5.6.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] A Synthetic Population for Modelling the Dynamics of Infectious Disease Transmission in American Samoa
    Xu, Zhijing
    Glass, Kathryn
    Lau, Colleen L.
    Geard, Nicholas
    Graves, Patricia
    Clements, Archie
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2017, 7
  • [2] MODELLING LYMPHATIC FILARIASIS TRANSMISSION IN AMERICAN SAMOA LONG-TERM POPULATION DYNAMICS AND SPATIALLY HETEROGENEOUS RISKS
    Xu, Zhijing
    Glass, Kathryn
    Lau, Colleen
    Geard, Nicholas
    Graves, Patricia
    Clements, Archie
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF TROPICAL MEDICINE AND HYGIENE, 2018, 99 (04): : 391 - 391
  • [3] Incorporating population dynamics into household models of infectious disease transmission
    Glass, K.
    McCaw, J. M.
    McVernon, J.
    EPIDEMICS, 2011, 3 (3-4) : 152 - 158
  • [5] Infectious disease modeling and the dynamics of transmission
    Real, L. A.
    Biek, R.
    WILDLIFE AND EMERGING ZOONOTIC DISEASES: THE BIOLOGY, CIRCUMSTANCES AND CONSEQUENCES OF CROSS-SPECIES TRANSMISSION, 2007, 315 : 33 - 49
  • [6] Modelling the effect of urbanization on the transmission of an infectious disease
    Zhang, Ping
    Atkinson, Peter M.
    MATHEMATICAL BIOSCIENCES, 2008, 211 (01) : 166 - 185
  • [7] MODELLING CROWDING EFFECTS IN INFECTIOUS DISEASE TRANSMISSION
    Waters, Edward K.
    BULLETIN OF THE AUSTRALIAN MATHEMATICAL SOCIETY, 2015, 92 (03) : 522 - 523
  • [8] Challenges in Modelling Infectious Disease Dynamics: Preface
    Lloyd-Smith, James O.
    Mollison, Denis
    Metcalf, C. Jessica E.
    Klepac, Petra
    Heesterbeek, J. A. P.
    EPIDEMICS, 2015, 10 : III - IV
  • [9] Editorial: Infectious Disease Epidemiology and Transmission Dynamics
    Du, Zhanwei
    Luo, Wei
    Sippy, Rachel
    Wang, Lin
    VIRUSES-BASEL, 2023, 15 (01):
  • [10] Tooling-up for infectious disease transmission modelling
    Baguelin, Marc
    Medley, Graham F.
    Nightingale, Emily S.
    O'Reilly, Kathleen M.
    Rees, Eleanor M.
    Waterlow, Naomi R.
    Wagner, Moritz
    EPIDEMICS, 2020, 32